Cassette.MSBuild lets you pre-build your asset bundles. This is a key
step if you want to upload your bundles to a CDN for release builds instead of serving them from your web server.
Unfortunately, Cassette.MSBuild is - as the name indicates - intended for use with MSBuild, not mono-based build processes.
Here’s how you can use it in a non-MSBuild environment, like a NancyFX application built in
Xamarin Studio on OS X.

Typically, you’ll know what migrations need to be run on the production database on deploy. You can check on a production
server with rake db:migrate:status | grep down, but that requires the server to have been deployed with the migrations
that need to be run. It’s much more convenient to be able to see what migrations in your local project have yet to be
run on the production database.

There’s a common pattern when receiving third-party notifications (a.k.a. webhooks) in Rails applications: using request.raw_post to
initialize a wrapper around the notification data. ActionDispatch automatically parses the body of the request into the
request.params hash, which can incur significant overhead for large payloads. Skipping this automatic params parsing
can result in a big speedup:

Rails helpfully logs queries to ActiveRecord::Base.logger in development mode. This logging is an easy way to keep an
eye on unexpected costs hidden by Rails’ abstractions - like N + 1 queries - which might otherwise slip by unnoticed. One thing
I’ve found that makes this query logging even more useful is to log the line of code that caused the query.